Biliary Secretion and the Enterohepatic Circulation of Bile Flashcards
1
Q
Why is bile important?
A
- Lipid digestion and absorption
- Cholesterol homeostasis
- Excretion of lipid soluble xenobiotics / drug metabolites / heavy metals
2
Q
what is bile?
A
- Complex lipid-rich micellar solution (water, inorganic electrolytes, and organic solutes – bile acids, phospholipids, cholesterol, bile pigments)
- Isosmotic with plasma
- 500-600mls per day
- Formation depends on the hepatic SYNTHESIS and cannalicular SECRETION of bile acids (=major organic anion in bile)
- Maintenance of hepatic bile formation is essential for normal liver function
- Most bile acids (95%) secreted by hepatocyte have been previously secreted into intestine (enterohepatic circulation)
3
Q
Bile acids
A
- Synthesised from cholesterol in pericentral hepatocytes of the acini
- Cholesterol (lipophilic) – cholic acid (CA) and chenodeoxycholic acid (CDCA) (water soluble) (primary bile acids)
- CA and CDCA are conjugated (N-acyl amidated with glycine or taurine) before secretion into the bile canaliculus
- Conjugation enhances the hydrophilicity and acidic strength of the side chain (pKa = 5.0 unconjugated; pKa = 3.9 glycine conjugate; pKa 2.0 taurine conjugate
- Conjugation decreases passive diffusion of bile acids across cell membranes during transit through EHC (ie keeps intraluminal)
- Amphipathic (hydrophilic and hydrophobic parts) – reduce surface tension and aid emulsification
4
Q
emulsification
A
- Fat (TG) is insoluble in water
- Emulsification increases surface area for lipolysis. Stable emulsion important for the close apposition of lipase and TG
- Lipases act at surface of emulsified droplets and liberate FA from the glycerol backbone of TG (lipolysis)
5
Q
function of bile acids
A
- Induce bile flow (osmotic effect) & secretion of biliary lipids (PL and cholesterol)
- Digestion of dietary fats – by solubilising lipids and lipid digestion products as mixed micelles facilitating aqueous diffusion across intestinal mucosa
- Facilitates protein absorption – accelerating hydrolysis by pancreatic proteases
- Cholesterol homeostasis – facilitates dietary absorption / elimination as BA are water-soluble end-products of cholesterol catabolism. Induce bile flow and solubilise cholesterol – enabling movement from hepatocyte to intestinal lumen
- Antimicrobial (physicochemical + inducing anti-microbial genes)
- Prevents calcium gallstones and oxalate renal stones
6
Q
Enterohepatic circulation 1
A
- FASTED – bile acids travel down biliary tract to GB (concn x10)
- FED – CCK (cholecystokinin) released from duodenal mucosa
- CCK – relaxes SO and contracts GB releasing concentrated solution of mixed micelles (BA, PL, cholesterol)
- Bile acids (conjugated) remain intraluminal
- Actively transported (reabsorbed) via the apical sodium bile acid transporter (ASBT)
- Re-enters liver via portal circulation
- Bile acids taken up by hepatocyte and (re-conjugated) secreted into biliary canaliculi
- Usually 2-3 cycles per meal
- Bile acid feedback mechanism – inhibition of CYP7A1 (cytochrome P450 7A1) = cholesterol 7𝛼 hydroxylase
7
Q
Enterohepatic circulation
A
- Rare inherited defects in bile acid synthesis
- Deconjugation of bile acids (small bowel bacterial overgrowth)
- Cholecystectomy (5% diarrhoea) – daily bile acid secretion is not altered much. Bile is ‘stored’ in proximal small intestine – likely big ‘shift’ to distal small intestine ‘overwhelms’ transport mechanism or feedback mechanism
- Ileal resection or disease – unabsorbed bile acids enter colon where inhibit water absorption / induce secretion resulting in ‘bile salt diarrhoea’
- Biliary obstruction – CBD stone, pancreatic carcinoma – intestinal malabsorption of fat soluble vitamins and fat resulting in steatorrhoea and develop jaundice